《Punishing Fieldwork: Penal Domination and Prison Ethnography》

打印
作者
Michael Gibson-Light Josh Seim
来源
JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY ETHNOGRAPHY,Vol.49,Issue5,P.691–709
语言
英文
关键字
作者单位
1Department of Sociology & Criminology, University of Denver, Denver, CO, USA;2University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
摘要
Ethnographic studies inside prisons are especially difficult to execute. In addition to facing amplified challenges in gaining site access, earning subjects’ trust, and tolerating the exhaustion of fieldwork, researchers who collect participant observation and in-depth interview data behind bars must confront an explicit asymmetrical power relation. Prison ethnographers penetrate, to varying levels of depth, a social universe where staff dominate prisoners and where prisoners, largely in response to the pains of their imprisonment, carve paths to dignity. This paper considers how and where non-staff and non-incarcerated ethnographers can awkwardly fit into (or fail out of) this space. Drawing on insights from two ethnographic studies in the United States, the authors detail their particular and common experiences across three phases: access, collection, and exit. These experiences motivate a description of prison ethnography as “punishing fieldwork.” Such research is not only exacting, it is also significantly contained and directed by penal power.